JavaTM 2 Platform
Std. Ed. v1.3

java.security
Class Security

java.lang.Object
  |
  +--java.security.Security

public final class Security
extends Object

This class centralizes all security properties and common security methods. One of its primary uses is to manage providers.


Method Summary
static int addProvider(Provider provider)
          Adds a provider to the next position available.
static String getAlgorithmProperty(String algName, String propName)
          Deprecated. This method used to return the value of a proprietary property in the master file of the "SUN" Cryptographic Service Provider in order to determine how to parse algorithm-specific parameters. Use the new provider-based and algorithm-independent AlgorithmParameters and KeyFactory engine classes (introduced in the Java 2 platform) instead.
static String getProperty(String key)
          Gets a security property value.
static Provider getProvider(String name)
          Returns the provider installed with the specified name, if any.
static Provider[] getProviders()
          Returns an array containing all the installed providers.
static Provider[] getProviders(Map filter)
          Returns an array containing all installed providers that satisfy the specified selection criteria, or null if no such providers have been installed.
static Provider[] getProviders(String filter)
          Returns an array containing all installed providers that satisfy the specified selection criterion, or null if no such providers have been installed.
static int insertProviderAt(Provider provider, int position)
          Adds a new provider, at a specified position.
static void removeProvider(String name)
          Removes the provider with the specified name.
static void setProperty(String key, String datum)
          Sets a security property value.
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
 

Method Detail

getAlgorithmProperty

public static String getAlgorithmProperty(String algName,
                                          String propName)
Deprecated. This method used to return the value of a proprietary property in the master file of the "SUN" Cryptographic Service Provider in order to determine how to parse algorithm-specific parameters. Use the new provider-based and algorithm-independent AlgorithmParameters and KeyFactory engine classes (introduced in the Java 2 platform) instead.

Gets a specified property for an algorithm. The algorithm name should be a standard name. See Appendix A in the Java Cryptography Architecture API Specification & Reference for information about standard algorithm names. One possible use is by specialized algorithm parsers, which may map classes to algorithms which they understand (much like Key parsers do).
Parameters:
algName - the algorithm name.
propName - the name of the property to get.
Returns:
the value of the specified property.

insertProviderAt

public static int insertProviderAt(Provider provider,
                                   int position)
Adds a new provider, at a specified position. The position is the preference order in which providers are searched for requested algorithms. Note that it is not guaranteed that this preference will be respected. The position is 1-based, that is, 1 is most preferred, followed by 2, and so on.

If the given provider is installed at the requested position, the provider that used to be at that position, and all providers with a position greater than position, are shifted up one position (towards the end of the list of installed providers).

A provider cannot be added if it is already installed.

First, if there is a security manager, its checkSecurityAccess method is called with the string "insertProvider."+provider.getName() to see if it's ok to add a new provider. If the default implementation of checkSecurityAccess is used (i.e., that method is not overriden), then this will result in a call to the security manager's checkPermission method with a SecurityPermission("insertProvider."+provider.getName()) permission.

Parameters:
provider - the provider to be added.
position - the preference position that the caller would like for this provider.
Returns:
the actual preference position in which the provider was added, or -1 if the provider was not added because it is already installed.
Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its SecurityManager.checkSecurityAccess(java.lang.String) method denies access to add a new provider
See Also:
getProvider(java.lang.String), removeProvider(java.lang.String), SecurityPermission

addProvider

public static int addProvider(Provider provider)
Adds a provider to the next position available.

First, if there is a security manager, its checkSecurityAccess method is called with the string "insertProvider."+provider.getName() to see if it's ok to add a new provider. If the default implementation of checkSecurityAccess is used (i.e., that method is not overriden), then this will result in a call to the security manager's checkPermission method with a SecurityPermission("insertProvider."+provider.getName()) permission.

Parameters:
provider - the provider to be added.
Returns:
the preference position in which the provider was added, or -1 if the provider was not added because it is already installed.
Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its SecurityManager.checkSecurityAccess(java.lang.String) method denies access to add a new provider
See Also:
getProvider(java.lang.String), removeProvider(java.lang.String), SecurityPermission

removeProvider

public static void removeProvider(String name)
Removes the provider with the specified name.

When the specified provider is removed, all providers located at a position greater than where the specified provider was are shifted down one position (towards the head of the list of installed providers).

This method returns silently if the provider is not installed.

First, if there is a security manager, its checkSecurityAccess method is called with the string "removeProvider."+name to see if it's ok to remove the provider. If the default implementation of checkSecurityAccess is used (i.e., that method is not overriden), then this will result in a call to the security manager's checkPermission method with a SecurityPermission("removeProvider."+name) permission.

Parameters:
name - the name of the provider to remove.
Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its SecurityManager.checkSecurityAccess(java.lang.String) method denies access to remove the provider
See Also:
getProvider(java.lang.String), addProvider(java.security.Provider)

getProviders

public static Provider[] getProviders()
Returns an array containing all the installed providers. The order of the providers in the array is their preference order.
Returns:
an array of all the installed providers.

getProvider

public static Provider getProvider(String name)
Returns the provider installed with the specified name, if any. Returns null if no provider with the speicified name is installed.
Parameters:
name - the name of the provider to get.
Returns:
the provider of the specified name.
See Also:
removeProvider(java.lang.String), addProvider(java.security.Provider)

getProviders

public static Provider[] getProviders(String filter)
Returns an array containing all installed providers that satisfy the specified selection criterion, or null if no such providers have been installed. The returned providers are ordered according to their preference order.

A cryptographic service is always associated with a particular algorithm or type. For example, a digital signature service is always associated with a particular algorithm (e.g., DSA), and a CertificateFactory service is always associated with a particular certificate type (e.g., X.509).

The selection criterion must be specified in one of the following two formats:

See Appendix A in the Java Cryptogaphy Architecture API Specification & Reference for information about standard cryptographic service names, standard algorithm names and standard attribute names.

Parameters:
filter - the criterion for selecting providers. The filter is case-insensitive.
Returns:
all the installed providers that satisfy the selection criterion, or null if no such providers have been installed.
Throws:
InvalidParameterException - if the filter is not in the required format

getProviders

public static Provider[] getProviders(Map filter)
Returns an array containing all installed providers that satisfy the specified selection criteria, or null if no such providers have been installed. The returned providers are ordered according to their preference order.

The selection criteria are represented by a map. Each map entry represents a selection criterion. A provider is selected iff it satisfies all selection criteria. The key for any entry in such a map must be in one of the following two formats:

See Appendix A in the Java Cryptogaphy Architecture API Specification & Reference for information about standard cryptographic service names, standard algorithm names and standard attribute names.

Parameters:
filter - the criteria for selecting providers. The filter is case-insensitive.
Returns:
all the installed providers that satisfy the selection criteria, or null if no such providers have been installed.
Throws:
InvalidParameterException - if the filter is not in the required format

getProperty

public static String getProperty(String key)
Gets a security property value.

First, if there is a security manager, its checkPermission method is called with a java.security.SecurityPermission("getProperty."+key) permission to see if it's ok to retrieve the specified security property value..

Parameters:
key - the key of the property being retrieved.
Returns:
the value of the security property corresponding to key.
Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission) method denies access to retrieve the specified security property value
See Also:
SecurityPermission

setProperty

public static void setProperty(String key,
                               String datum)
Sets a security property value.

First, if there is a security manager, its checkPermission method is called with a java.security.SecurityPermission("setProperty."+key) permission to see if it's ok to set the specified security property value.

Parameters:
key - the name of the property to be set.
datum - the value of the property to be set.
Throws:
SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its SecurityManager.checkPermission(java.security.Permission) method denies access to set the specified security property value
See Also:
SecurityPermission

JavaTM 2 Platform
Std. Ed. v1.3

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